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About Us
Background & Funding
In 2022, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) granted North Carolina Division of Public Health (NCDPH) funding through the Public Health Infrastructure Grant (PHIG) to help meet critical infrastructure needs in the short term and to make possible strategic investments that would have lasting effects on public health agencies across the United States.
With PHIG funds, NCDPH partnered with the North Carolina Institute for Public Health (NCIPH) in 2024 to create the NC Governmental Public Health Pathways Program, a self-sustaining program whose purpose is to increase the recruitment and retention of a skilled and knowledgeable governmental public health workforce in NC.
Who is NCDPH?
The North Carolina Division of Public Health (NCDPH) works to protect the public's health across North Carolina and helps shape positive health outcomes for North Carolinians and the communities in which they live, learn, work, worship, and play.
The Division's programs and services, implemented in collaboration with local health departments and state, federal and private partners, touch the lives of every North Carolinian and visitor to the state 24 hours a day, seven days a week.
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Who is NCIPH?
Since 1999, the North Carolina Institute for Public Health (NCIPH) has served as a bridge between academia and public health practice partners including state and local public health agencies, healthcare and community organizations.
Although formally established in 1999, some of NCIPH’s core programs, particularly continuing education, began in the 1930s as a core function of public health at UNC-Chapel Hill.
With the mission of “creating systems, programs and policies that work for all,” NCIPH serves as a resource for public health professionals across the state, region and country.
Addressing Turnover & Strengthening Our Public Health Workforce
The Problem
Nearly half of state and local public health employees left their organizations from 2017 to 2021, creating a critical lack of skills and experience across the nation.
Click to enlarge infographic
Why it Matters
In addition to eroding services that improve chronic disease, injury prevention, maternal and child health, environmental health, and other needs, this loss of public health experience and institutional knowledge puts communities at significant risk for infectious diseases and other health crises.
The Solutions
Public health departments need to drastically improve their recruitment & retention. Some important strategies include:
Creating recruitment pathways for people with undergraduate & graduate degrees
Reforming and streamlining hiring systems
Reduce stress and prevent burnout by reducing workloads through creative solutions like hosting internships or practicum projects
Creating mentorship programs to prepare early-career professionals for leadership roles